The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, July 17, 1979-Page 9 Reporters MIDDLETOWN, Pa. (AP) - Fif- teen reporters donned red hard hats, radiation detection badges, and name tags yesterday to take part in the news media's first tour of Three Mile Island since an accident at the nuclear plant shook the world March 28. "We've been working ourselves up to a point where we thought it was timely to brief the news media," said Bob Arnold, vice-president of General Public Utilities, the holding company that owns the crippled plant. WHILE REPORTERS accom- panied three earlier tours by President Carter and investigating panels, this was the first time visits were arranged just for the press. The reporters chosen for yester- day's tour boarded a bus that ferried them through a chain-link gate and across a bridge leading to the island in the middle of the Susquehanna River. Plant spokesman Bill Gross ser- ved as tour guide, leading the visitors around the grounds dominated by four huge cooling towers. "This is the infamous Unit 2 con- trol room," said Gross, as he opened a door to reveal a vast array of in- struments, dials, and red and green visit Three Mile Island, Atmosphere more relaxed lights. A harrowing series of human errors and mechanical problems left the reactor's 100 tons of uranium fuel uncovered by cooling water for nearly an hour, allowing radiation to leak into the atmosphere and raising the possibility of a disastrous melt- down. A second unit was shut for refuel- ing at the time ind will be idled for at least another year to allow the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to hold public hearings. SHIFT FOREMAN Fred Scheimann, who ran the control room when the crisis erupted 110 days ago, pointed at two dials on one of the control room's instrument panels. "Those were the initial ones," he said, singling out controls that should have alerted workers that auxiliary feedwater had been cut off from the damaged reactor. "That's where we've had most of our questions up to this point," said Scheimann. "It's been a busy three months," he added. ADORNING BOTH dials now are crumpled yellow tags that say, "Only to be opened by approved EP (emergency procedure) or shift supervisor ... There were no surprises or sub- stantially new information gleaned from the tour, except perhaps that the atmosphere on Three Mile Island is considerably more relaxed than it was this spring. Workers went about installing in- sulation on huge pipes in much the same manner any factory worker acts - although the pipes carried cooling water from the world's most famous and most mangled nuclear reactor. REPORTERS SAW two extensive construction endeavors, both necessitated by the accident and both completed in a fraction of the time that such projects would take under less pressing conditions. One was a new system to clean 250,000 gallons of contaminated water now stored in tanks insideean auxiliary building adjoining the reactor building. The other was a maze of plum- bing, in the basement of a turbine generator building. which now ser- Auto talks begin at GM despite 2-hour delay tContinued from Page 3 conspiracy at the facility in violation of an agreement with GM that cleared the way for union organizing efforts at the company's Southern plants. GM's top negotiator, George Morris, denied that plant level officials were aiding the distribution of anti-union literature and said the company will stand by its neutrality agreement and national labor relations law. Negotiations covering GM's 460,000 UAW workers were recessed until Friday. Opening contract talks will begin at Ford Motor Co. today and Chrysler Corp. tomorrow. LAST LAUGH KETTING, England (AP)-Arthur Wood was rejected by the British army at age 40 because he had a bad heart and was told he did not have long to live. Wood recently celebrated his 103rd birthday. Regulations should raise Midwest gas prices prevalent in the West, so many prices there should fall to meet the 15.4-cent profit limit. HARPER'S GROUP had sought greater relief - an estimated 16.5-cent ceiling. "The change lets dealers hang on but it doesn't enable them to rebuild the profits they have lost due to in- flation," he said. Many independent dealers in Pen- nsylvania, Delaware, and New Jersey closed stations to protest the old profit margins, which had been frozen since 1974. Many of those in Pennsylvania and Delaware ended their three-day strike yesterday. "It's too early to tell whether they will be placated," Harper said. The key, he added, will be the reaction of governors. "THE ENERGY Department has passed the buck to the states ... many dealers are worried the governors won't help," Harper said. Also designed to help the smaller, in- dependent stations are new allocation rules issued yesterday. These rules will reduce gasoline now going to new service stations, certain priority users and their suppliers, and wholesalers that have lost customers but continue to get volumes based on past business. Some allocation rules will not go into effect until after this summer. But retroactive to July 6, no new station will get more than 50,000 gallons per month, the Energy Department said. Officials acknowledge this will ef- fectively prevent more high-volume station.s,[rjom springin .upsawhile the current gasoline sfiortage continues. Scottish Chamber Orchestra Paul Freeman', conductor Martha Naset, pianist On its first U.S. tour, this young orchestra has already earned a name for itself in Europe. Paul Freeman, u-eli-known to Southeastern Michigan concertgoers, is guest conductor, and piano soloist is U-M Music School graduate Martha Naset. 8:30 pm, Hill Auditorium ' CONCERT PROGRAM "Impresario" Orerture'............ Mozart Svmphoneyv No. 4............ Mendelssohn Piano Concerto No. I...........IBeethoren Dances of Galantae................ Kodaly Tickets are $4, $5.50 and $7 at Burton Tower, weekdavs 9-4:30, Sat. 9.12 or at the leox office which opens at 7. Telephone 665-3717. a :. __ a.__ ...a ... ._ . ._